From that article you posted… Thiel, a libertarian and early Trump supporter, wrote in 2009 that he no longer considered democracy compatible with freedom and has advocated escaping politics by colonizing outer space or seasteading — building communities in ungoverned oceans. Fellow venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, an informal advisor to Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), is part of a tech-investor consortium seeking to build a city on grazing land outside San Francisco. Another venture capitalist and informal DOGE advisor, Joe Lonsdale, also promotes low-regulation cities. In a statement to Reuters, Lonsdale celebrated “expanding our country to Greenland” but did not comment on plans for a city there. Thiel and Andreessen, leading proponents and financiers of the startup-city movement, are among those supportive of a Greenland outpost, two of the sources said. Reuters could not determine whether the two billionaires are actively lobbying the Trump administration for a Greenland city.[/I] Thiel ———> Vance ——-> Trump
If we conquered our neighbors how could we absolutely wreck them in sports like our women hockey team just did to the Canadians.
Conquer Brazil, Argentina, France, Germany, then profits. Maybe also England, Uruguay, Spain and Italy just to be safe.
https://www.cnn.com/2026/02/21/politics/trump-greenland-hospital-boat Trump is sending a hospital boat to Greenland. I like how the article says it’s not clear why since both Denmark and Greenland have free, universal health care.
He could have just said "Thank you" to Denmark for graciously rescuing a US sailor and evacuated him to treat him in a hospital in Greenland https://abcnews.com/International/u...bmarine-greenland-official/story?id=130377835 The US hospital boat (still under renovation) is pure gaslighting. Greenlanders most likely have better healthcare than the US
I really think some country should send a hospital ship to the USA to provide free medical treatment to Americans.
Better have some river boats as well to get to the rural poor in red states, where the need for health care is probably the greatest.